UK retailer Tesco has withdrawn an advertisement claiming its bread is baked from scratch in-store following a complaint by the Real Bread Campaign (RBC).

The complaint, which was upheld by the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), questioned the authenticity of the retailer’s claim, when it is believed the majority of loaves are cooked from chilled or frozen.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

The press ad stated: “Fresh bread. Baked from scratch in our in store bakery. Using 100% British flour. So every single loaf is genuinely British … Born and bread”.

However, small print stated: “Subject to availability. Selected UK stores. British Flour used in all products that are baked from scratch in store as stickered in pack. French Baguettes, batons and products not baked from scratch excluded.”

The RBC challenged whether the ad misleadingly implied the brad was “baked from scratch” in all stores, when it understood only 480 stores baked bread.

It also believed the small print contradicted rather than clarified the headline claim.

GlobalData Strategic Intelligence

US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?

Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.

By GlobalData

In its defence, Tesco stated that bread was baked from scratch in 504 of its in-store bakeries, predominantly in its larger stores, and used part-baked or bread which is finished in the in-store bakery, in 1,288 stores.

Tesco believed that the small print in the ad explained what a “scratch bakery” was and made clear that those loaves were available in selected stores, and insisted that only British flour was used.

In a ruling, the watchdog concluded: “Because we considered that the ad implied that all Tesco stores with a bakery facility baked bread from scratch, which was true of only a limited number of stores, we concluded the ad was likely to mislead.”

The ASA said the ad must not appear again in its current form.

A spokesperson for Tesco said: “We can confirm that the ads have been changed in accordance with the ruling.”

Just Food Excellence Awards - Nominations Closed

Nominations are now closed for the Just Food Excellence Awards. A big thanks to all the organisations that entered – your response has been outstanding, showcasing exceptional innovation, leadership, and impact.

Excellence in Action
Winning five categories in the 2025 Just Food Excellence Awards, Centric Software is setting the pace for digital transformation in food and FMCG. Explore how its integrated PLM and PXM suite delivers faster launches, smarter compliance and data-driven growth for complex, multi-channel product portfolios.

Discover the Impact